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Knowledge Update

Introduction & Purpose
Knowledge update and Industry update at Skyline University College (SUC) is an online platform for communicating knowledge with SUC stakeholders, industry, and the outside world about the current trends of business development, technology, and social changes. The platform helps in branding SUC as a leading institution of updated knowledge base and in encouraging faculties, students, and others to create and contribute under different streams of domain and application. The platform also acts as a catalyst for learning and sharing knowledge in various areas.

Women with dementia at greater disadvantage than men

London, Dec 5 (IANS) Women with dementia receive less health monitoring and take more potentially harmful medication than men with dementia, says a study.

The Britain-based study found that women were at particular risk of staying on anti-psychotic or sedative medication for longer. 

This might be because they have fewer appointments where their treatment can be reviewed, the study said.

"As women tend to live longer than men, they are more likely to live alone without a family carer to help them access healthcare," said lead researcher Claudia Cooper from University College London.

"Perhaps because of this, they are more at risk of missing out on medical help that might help them stay well for longer. We found that women were more likely to be on psychotropic drugs -- sedatives or anti-psychotics -- which can be harmful in the long term and may not be appropriate," Cooper said.

"Women tended to stay on such drugs for longer, perhaps because they have fewer check-ups to see if the drugs were still needed," Cooper explained.

The researchers analysed the records of 68,000 dementia patients and 259,000 people without dementia to compare their access to healthcare services, using The Health Improvement Network (THIN) database. 

Overall, people with dementia received less medical care than those without even though they are more vulnerable to physical and mental illnesses, showed the study published in the journal Age and Ageing.

Compared to men with dementia, women with dementia had lower rates of surgery consultations, of annual blood pressure monitoring and of annual weight monitoring .

Men with dementia were less likely to be taking psychotropic medication than women with dementia. 

"Women with dementia who live on their own may need additional support accessing healthcare services," Cooper said.

"Improving access to healthcare and reducing psychotropic drug use in people with dementia, especially women, could help them to live well with dementia for longer," Cooper noted.

Bones can tell of brain degeneration in Alzheimer's: Study

New York, Dec 5 (IANS) A person's bones may act as one of the earliest indicators of brain degeneration in Alzheimer's disease, researchers have found.

Alzheimer's is a progressive disease that destroys memory and other important mental functions.

The study showed that early reduction in bone mineral density that occur in a preclinical model of Alzheimer's are due to degeneration in an area of the brainstem.

The brainstem is a region that controls mood, sleep and metabolism -- that produces the majority of the brain's serotonin -- a neurochemical that controls our mood and sleep.

The reduced bone mineral density, which sometimes leads to osteoporosis, translates to increased bone fracture risk, decreased quality of life, and increased mortality for Alzheimer's patients. 

Further, early bone loss and serotonin deficiency in Alzheimer's may tell us something very important about how we approach diagnosis and treatment, the researchers noted.

"Routine assessment of bone density could serve as a useful biomarker for Alzheimer's risk in ageing population," said lead author Christine Dengler-Crish, Assistant Professor at Northeast Ohio Medical University(Neomed) in the US. 

"The findings of this study motivate us to explore the serotonin system as a potential new therapeutic target for this devastating disease," Dengler-Crish added.

The study is forthcoming in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

You take riskier decisions as the day advances

New York, Dec 5 (IANS) Frequent casino goers probably know it already, but a new study has found evidence that our decisions tend to be quicker and less accurate as the day wears on.

The findings based on decisions taken by chess players hold true irrespective of whether someone is in the habit of waking up early in the morning or later in the day.

"During the morning, players adopt a prevention focus policy (slower and more accurate decisions) which is later modified to a promotion focus (faster but less accurate decisions), without daily changes in performance," the study said.

Diego Golombek from the National University of Quilmes in Argentina and colleagues said that human behaviour and physiology exhibit fluctuations in a single day. 

The researchers examined the quality of moves in more than one million games of chess in an online database. They charted the decisions of 99 prolific players by gauging the time they took for each move and its usefulness in leading to a victory, Science magazine reported.

Understanding whether decision-making in real-life situations depends on the relation between time of the day and an individual's diurnal preferences has both practical and theoretical implications. 

However, answering this question has remained elusive because of the difficulty of measuring precisely the quality of a decision in real-life scenarios. 

The researchers choose chess players for the study, as in a chess game, every player has to make around 40 decisions using a finite time budget and both the time and quality of each decision can be accurately determined. 

The researchers were not surprised to find that early risers preferred to play more games in the morning, whereas night owls, or those who generally stay up late at night, were active at dusk and beyond. 

But regardless of their diurnal preferences, the players took longer but better decisions in their early games. Their decisions became quicker and less effective by evening, said the study to be published in a forthcoming issue of the journal Cognition.

Dubai Crocodile Park to open next year-end

Dubai, Dec 4 (IANS/WAM) The Dubai Crocodile Park project is 43 per cent complete and will open at the end of next year, said Juma Al Fuqae, Director of Property Management Department and Vice Chairman of the Investment Committee at Dubai Municipality.

Al Fuqae said the opening has been extended to allow more time for preparations at the venue which is being set up on the lines of Crocodile Parks in France, and is considered to be the first of its kind in the Middle East.

Once open, the park will enable hundreds of crocodiles to grow and reproduce naturally, and will house many types of Nile crocodiles, the largest fresh-water species in the world.

Talking on the environmental aspect of the project, Al Fuqae said the engineering and construction materials used in the project are environment-friendly and depend on renewable energy and waste treatment.

Now Apple working on self-driving car

​New York, Dec 4 (IANS) A month after Volvo got an order of 100 self-driving cars from Uber, Apple has hinted that it will enter the driverless cars market where bigwigs like Tesla and Google have already made deep inroads, a media report said.

Use of privacy controls on Facebook depends on user: Study

​New York, Dec 4 (IANS) Even though the online social platforms are offering several privacy controls to users, it depends on the user how to use them making privacy a debatable issue, a new study has found.

Vapours from flavoured e-liquids toxic: Study

New York, Dec 4 (IANS) Researchers have found that the vapours which are produced after e-liquid flavourings are heated inside e-cigarettes, are toxic.

According to a study, reported in the ACS journal Environmental Science and Technology, when e-liquid flavourings are heated inside electronic nicotine-delivery systems, the flavourings break down into toxic compounds at levels that exceed occupational safety standards.

The researchers analysed vapours created from both unflavoured and flavoured e-liquids loaded into three popular types of e-cigarettes. 

The results showed that in general, one puff of flavoured vapour contained levels of aldehydes exceeding the safe thresholds for occupational exposure -- set by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists -- by factors of 1.5 to 270. Vapours from unflavoured e-liquids contained aldehydes at significantly lower levels.

Electronic cigarettes were first introduced to the market in 2003 and health officials have been tracking usage and studying potential health effects.

A 2015 survey by the National Centre for Health Statistics reported that 3.7 per cent of adults used the devices regularly and 12.6 per cent had tried them at least once.

Researchers create new method to improve predictions

New York, Dec 4 (IANS) A team of researchers has created a new method to analyse big data that better predicts outcomes in health care, politics and other fields.

In an effort to reduce the error rate with methods like using a significance-based criterion for evaluating variables to find highly predictive variables, researchers at Princeton, Columbia and Harvard universities in the US proposed a new measure called the influence score, or I-score, to better measure a variable's ability to predict.

In their study, to be published in journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers found that the I-score is effective in differentiating between noisy and predictive variables in big data and can significantly improve the prediction rate.

"The practical implications are what drove the project, so they are quite broad," lead author Adeline Lo said.

"That the I-score fares especially well in high dimensional data and with many complex interactions between variables is an extra boon for the researcher or policy expert interested in predicting something with large dimensional data," Lo, who is a postdoctoral researcher in Princeton's Department of Politics, added.

The I-score improved the prediction rate in breast cancer data from 70 per cent to 92 per cent. 

The I-score can be applied in a variety of fields, including terrorism, civil war, elections and financial markets, the researchers said.

Dogs can do what you do or remember what you say

London, Nov 24 (IANS) For all dog owners out there, your canine friends are paying attention to what you say and do and they'll remember too.

A new study has suggested that just like humans, dogs too have "episodic memory" -- the ability to remember and recall events from the past. 

The study revealed that dogs can recall a person's complex actions even when they don't expect to have their memory tested.

"The results of our study can be considered as a further step to break down artificially erected barriers between animals and humans," said Claudia Fugazza from Eotvos Lorand University (ELTE) in Budapest, Hungary. 

For the study, the team first trained 17 dogs to imitate human actions with the "Do as I Do" training method, in which dogs watch a person perform an action and then do the action themselves. 

For example, if their owner jumps in the air and then gives the "Do it!" command, the dog would jump in the air too.

Next, the dogs were trained to lie down after watching the human action, no matter what it was.

After the dogs had learned to lie down reliably, the researchers surprised them by saying "Do It" and the dogs did. 

The dogs were then tested in that way after one minute and after one hour. 

The results showed they were able to recall the demonstrated actions after both short and long time intervals. However, their memory faded somewhat over time, the researchers observed.

The same approach can most likely be used and adapted in a wide range of animal species, to better understand how animals' minds process their own actions and that of others around them, the researchers noted, in the study published in the journal Current Biology.

Limiting children's choice of toys can fuel stereotypes

New York, Dec 4 (IANS) While buying toys, parents and grandparents should consider the child's interests, not their gender because limiting choice of toys according to gender can fuel stereotypes, suggests new research.

Clues to the continued dominance of men in the STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields -- and the reason nurturing often comes more easily to women -- can be found in the children's toy department, said sociologist Elizabeth Sweet from California State University, Sacramento, US.

"When we wall off the toys that develop spatial skills or are devoted to science and say, 'These are only for boys,' and we wall off the toys that develop empathy and verbal skills and say, 'These are only for girls,' it severely limits how children develop," Sweet said in a university statement.

"If kids aren't exposed to the kinds of toys and play that help them develop those skills, they may not be as good at them over time. But even more insidious is that it reinforces the stereotype that boys are good at science and math, and girls are not. It pushes women and girls out of that field, because they think it's not for them," she explained.

Sweet believes that making STEM toys pink, as proposed by some toy manufacturers, would not help much.

"I think that's the wrong approach," Sweet said.

"I think that plays up the stereotype that girls are so different that they need a special kind of STEM toys," noted.

"Research shows that different kinds of toys help children to develop different kinds of skills," she said.

"For instance, building blocks are great for building spatial skills. Playing with dolls is really good for developing language skills and nurturing abilities. All of those skills are essential for a fully functioning human," Sweet pointed out.